Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Canadian Post (Lindsay, ONT), 27 Feb 1891, p. 8

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n, that a efec- very is {edthe Blood; 'HROP re pro- ons say where O. at does public sage of ats, '00. are Tried when stable client ottles gags them Farmer: ere told thet the English mur- mm .qp is hotter. than khtflsited Stet“. Returns from epoch} lbipmenu of picked lots are published in' the at.- tempt to ehow thin to be the cue. But shippers who have the lergeet interestin Cam “3': egg exports, end. the ere most likely to underetend the trade aid find the best market, deckre these return: to be unreli- able. The three Inge“. shippers in (heed: are'D.‘ D. WfleonkSon, Seeforth ; J. D. Moore, St. Vary’e, and T. ‘c; McNebb, Chathlm. .IWhet do theyeey t '1'” mm '08 ”0|. Vlownd'l'hm «tho m “type” In. J’. D. 3003.3: . 3 “People talk of “unlimited whet. over there, end any tint Briteinimporte ti; times umyegg. as the Unitedetetee. This thing thnt interests the producer in the price he is to get. It doee not matter how meny eggs Great Britain import: if the has been getting nll she vents at prices lower then the market to which our egg: have been going. The British merket'hu been supplied from countries edjecentâ€" from France, Belgium, Hound, Denmu'k and other countriesâ€"until the market. he: been overstocked and I lea-3e overflow found it- wey to the United Staten. Thstwu the eituetien until the McKinley Bil! chm. into efeot. The English market we: flooded before; and now the overflow to the United States is turned back, and it in in that market some super-sanguine people look for a. market for our eggs that will be better than thet of New York ; a. merket which, even before the immeme quantities tlnt have been taken by the United States were turned to it, was lees profitable than the American one. . . . . I. No mat- ter how we fix it we cennot hope to get as Profitable returns in England as we did in New York.” the product of the Western Suites; The [net that Irish and Englilh eggs command a. higher pried: an English make: em: Normandy eggs in evidence of the eflect on the price of their having to go 3 little MR. JOHN A. WILSON. Mr. John A. Wilson of Messrs. D. D. Wilson Son eeys: -â€"“ The thing thnt has nude Conadinn eggs preferred in New York over the Western eg I was the quickness with which we could send them there, only taking a few dnys. In England (kinds will be it the disadvantage of distance from the mnrket. There will be in that market the prejudice against Canndinn eggs that in New York there has beenngainst further. ” “I sgree with Mr. Moore thst the indi- cations are thst the American market may 1 stillbethe most profitable for our trade. ‘ There are plenty of letters in the news- pepers shout selling eggs in England, the good prices end the large qnentity required. All thst amounts to nothing unless we ‘ know whst it costs to mrket them. It mskes no difference to the farmer what qusntity of eggs is bought annually by Eng- lnnd. rl'he thing that is of importance is the profit end the price shippers will be able to psy. Not one of the prolific letter- vriters on the subject of eggs has told us what it costs to sell in Englsnd, and it is in the cost of merketing that the British 5 musket will be less profitable to the s‘... - per: than the New York." ‘ WHAT THE DUTY MEANS. These shippers are reliable witnesses. They have built up the Canadian egg trade. They ere not politicians, but shrewd, enter. prising business men, and they base their ‘ judgment on shipments they have made to I Englsnd. They have shipped egg; to I Liverpool. Under the most favorable con. 1 ditions, taking all the precautions that their ‘ long experience snggested,and in no case hsd 3 the re nlts been so pv'ofits‘n e as in the New York msr‘iet. Egg dealers endorse Mr. J, D. Moore’s calculation that the United Ste. es cv. sumers will probably p‘y one cent of the duty on ezgs levied lby the McKinley B ll, and the Canadhn pro. dnc rs will psy the other four cents. This means that the wives of the Csnsdim farmers when the; sell th~ir eggs this season will an to tske :onr cents .. do“; less then they would get but for 11;. Mb- Kinley duty. If the egg pruduct of 5. country which last year :nve 15 000W dozens of exports does no 2 decrease the 1,05 m. basin of cost of manufacture. (Jum- to the farmers’ wives this year! u will be $600,000 on Mr. M 011'; moi-f let/011. plough! and \such implements m «we eetimete For the next five yell-git Si! dam.“ in”; gr neurly ell iron, end steel, J elm Mum’s Government 1). W I.“ the duty‘oil the rev uteri-l increases the losswill be $3,000,000, It .5 w 3mg powder-My. '1‘th would be 1 my be feirly done, the whole duty 5f 5?. ”in“, 05 and the duty on left ced u yell cent- a dozen be cslcuhted, 171181053 {or by W , whicli #01111! 1.130 give u the the year Will be $750,000» all 1.85“ “new the west. Their prices ere for the five years $3,250,00Q if I 1° wet “PW oyerthere than our- on the the Liberal party he succeuful in -‘ V‘ ’ illicit.” W“, “(1.9!!! prim. elections the duty will be thrown off :5 would fill wadingly. 333?". ‘honld the recipi'oeel relations tint 'm g! “‘95,”. profit with the ' hfll texel umnged. And the Inn-keg in Which . ' on?“ in “0.3““? men-ht "M ach’eegg trade has you iron) ' "‘ W ”‘ fgala. It would make; flow-.6118 in 1870 to 15,000mo am in j '4‘!” " ' fi=hfiner§onthe goods~ Will be reopened. 7! .7; mm tq gape: cent“ and I gnu-hot almofthotnichnuhi !. McNABB. iy-yjâ€"A--.7u , I'v- than in Canada. The duty is 35 per cent., and we can lay these goods down 10 to 15 per cent. cheaper by buying in De- troit end peying the duty. We do 3 lei-go business in these lines and buy a.- great den! 1 across the river. Then take rubber goods, packing and hose. There is e duty of five cents 3 pound end 1.5 per cent. I bought last week in Detroit the lung grade of ger- den hose 31: die n foot for which Cenndisn houses charge eight cents. And so I might I so on mentioning other lines of herdmra and ironware." ed wire combine. ing tha duty than the Candi“: prices. All buildora’ hardwaro is cheaper PLéz‘é .to 59.99293“: Detroit. pcople pay them more then they can be bought for in Detroit, more by the emonnt of the duty. The same applies to axes of the better quelibios. The duty on axes isalso heavy $2 a dozen and 10 per cent. We can buy in Detroit for $6 an axe that the Canadian manufacturers will not sell for 1683 -tha.n $10. The Cnuadien manufacturers make plenty of cheap ex“, but] our customers want. good ones, and we buy a large number on the other side and bring them in at less cost liter pey- How the Wider Market Would Benefit Both Farmers and Menumoturere. The farmers of Censde ere standing in their own light, say; Mr. \Villiem Rildon, proprietor of the Erie Iron Works, St. Thomas, if they continue to support the National Policy. Mr. Risdon makes all kinds of null! agricultural imnlemente, such as plough, cultivator-e, rollere, etc. He ienot only not afraid of the United State: competition, but he says he will be able to go into the merkete of Michigan ‘ under unrestricted reciprocity. i Speaking of the oompentive prices of Imull farm mlchinery in Canada and the K United States, Mr. Riedon said :â€"“ Culti- | vetore are cheaper in Michigan than they E are in Cenedn. List“ year- i Detroit agent “hipped into Canada. 3 our lend of corn llcultivstorl and sold them for $7 ‘wholegalo, while Canadian culti- vators were selling at $8 whole- 38.19- They ere manufactured over there ct I0 much less cost that mum- ments that ere so commonly need :3 to make their cost. of importance -is theta the Canadian Insnufacturen are making the } f ' 10 h. and \such implements It. i :gg‘gmugor non-1y all iron. ufd lug], find. the «int! ”an nu mm max-em W iii-“y ”amicably. Thst would be “flown of “d the duty on loft cod I: well u r 1‘;-_1‘1 -‘-- .Jâ€"_ .._ LL- “â€"7 the“ .1: so much less cost that menu- future“ can sometimes efi‘ord to pay the 35 P“. pent. duty end sell here. If our c“; d production-were not added to by term mg; on everything we put into the implements we could eel] for lees by the mount of the duty end who on much profih We could keep the American culti- “m out. of this country if we wet. on tho ”a. mi. of cost .of manufacture. Culti- ~i'..-.-.; nlonghl and @uch implement: m Mango gape: oont" ad I my price! immodutely much" "Fungi: wen-o giants-«inur- I." “mama" can!” ‘" :1 n no doubt whatever of the 05:01: ml I: “acmthCofmdwOMM' bob”! mmfl_n. duty ban (Niall-Mug war AGRICULTURAL LINDSAY. FRIDAY“; T7 mm the m at human-sag ‘- M hsd two kinds 0! hone-exporting erode“: Th» to she Women Sum- end Penmyhl‘ nib, end the other to who mnuhcmriflg towns of the Eaten: Sam. The first. we? the most. profiuhle and took the he» of the. colts rained on the hunt a liberal pric‘es 0‘ from 3150:» $260 per head. ’ The Neg E3813“! Rude, none the la‘ useful. - L-_-V chap urinals worth lea than 8100. Th! McKinley duty mum mu than mad with crippling ofi'oct. 6n the} Western “d Penuylvmis tnde tho duty. [evict 1 tax of$30perhead. Th. Month. New England trade in slums: prohibitive. This a what Mr. J. Ruttenbury of Ciinwn. one of the moat. widely-known horn-dealer- md best. informed in Western Ontario sud t Comer-valve in politics, 33y: :-- ‘ MR. J. RAWU’RY. ', “The new duty of 830 per had on hora worth has than 8156 ME 30 per cent. on worth $150 or more, can d1 round. On 3 horse nlued a. 8149 and on one werth only 890 the duty would dik- bo $30, wherou under the old 20 per cent. tuif 6n the $90 horse the duty would the but 818. On a. horse worth $150 the new duty will be £45 a computed with only $30 under the old. It is on tho high-priced heroes end the ‘plugl’ thet the greet difference be~ tween the old and new tuifi'e lies. On e $175 horse $52 50 is now token ; ‘ and on one worth $200, and there are ‘ many of thnt price, the new duty is $60 against. 540 before. And no I have drendy pointed out, this meeeuree anly e pert of the efi'ect of the terifl', for the pmctice of the dealers of getting mam oyer for breéflmg. purpose: we: 0. source of coneidenble profit. trade. I m s Camemtive, but there 1'! reciprocity béénne 1.5657333 this their TIE"; eete demand it.” With reference be hot-.0,- he aid: â€"“ There he: been e drop it prices of $25 a. head at least. :38 the during the pest month or six weeks, time the McKinley Bill Moreover, the new tuifi' makes the inter- ference of the customs eppreisers much more nations and expensive. Before if s horse were bought for $145 wd it wu' dc. clued by the custom to be worth $175; the difl'erenco' in the duty would be 86. Such proceeding under the present tuifl' would mesa s difl’erenoe of duty of $22 50L Tho vageries of a. customs officer cmot be accounted for or provided sgninlt. and In: this 18 s new end important factor in tSO Mr. John McMahon of Sedorth, one of the largest shippers of horses in thy ‘35 and e Conservntive, made this stetem'dlt in the letter pert of last November .-- --“I need to ship on ‘9 avenge about. two co: 19d! of horses from this district every week dur- ing the lete summer and fell. The! wanldl” shout. 26 heed every week for% week-00.0!“ ever 800 during the year. They were hhig~ priced dnught home for Pennsylvenin and heuvy truck horses for Detroit. This yen I hve only shipped one earlond. George Cox, the Detroit dealer, in other years would be up here hslf his time. He has not been here at :11 thie year. The avenge price Irhnve pnid for hone: in probably 8150,10 tint the purchue of the 800 horse! am. In previous years my shipment omhrw- ed would amount to 3 distribution of about $12,500 among the farmers; and this by only- one of many buyers. Now there are no horses going away. and, of Each you there has prohlhly gone out of this section 1,500 horse: which would aver- age 8150011160 etch. Now those horses would not bring thl former more then 8125 or $130 each. Or. instead of 1311050 1.300 horses at the old prices pub- tina‘into the pockets of the far mars say $195,000. st present prices they would only fetw $162500. that is $32,500 1685. We usedto send 3 good many horses *0 Montreal, end from there they would!” sent some: into the New England maniac- turing town- for milk weggonn, ice delivery weggonl end such men. They were chat? horses that would avenge, 6%. On them the dutx need to b. :18, end an extra- 312 put on by the McKinley Bill has stopptd that. ‘trode com- :plotsly. Aubrey, the Menu-eel buyer. i“ F° W “P h," regal-r1! I'm“ time-n. you- tnd take down Ihipmenu- He was here once thin Ml but only bought three or four heed. Pet Dug of 300“” mauphere last week ‘0 buy, but only boughtm had. 11:- buym on only' pty so much if they ere to mat. “1M .dwthenewduty is. and, end the ftp ‘nendonebnk'otoeg then- hem so“ jhe reducedpneg.” gr; L n. rmaanmbb- «tried onehm-bnyhgmdeh the Hum d'nâ€" u-sot torso you-I. "my. New Bill.” ~â€"' __-_ -__ _,,,, bobroughttoleothnz day an» allml manhhhmm'm 0“ .ho'ud-vmwmpnnu,‘ , “"15."me the horse trade higher thgn and.- ref: kite. Tho now an; I... put 3 Muteptothotnd- I In” bun doinx. mdlmdonothingufllth knur- . “l.- in difl'emt MR. JOHN MOWON. on. 6f" NW will ”1.3.5.0 pood- ”MMMMW 3p ‘ ‘U'Yldfl' “*0 old United Stetee mil the duty oni tyne me u aom- men-aw nevi Klnley Bill it will be 860 each. The diler- ence in the writ: mounts to from 815 upwards on every horse- 1 Mn 80m; outeomeds‘yeoogto ”lilo-aha! ”mo horses, but I do not expect to do my- thing It the prices I elnll be forced to ofl'er. Lest you I 3111de out 500,“ bought in am district. Some of them were as high “3900, end the sveuge would be $100, so, Wt the horse trade I did last your amounted- “ $30, 000 to the tumors of this district. TN! you I hve shipped only one our land. end tint was before the McKinley Bill cane ‘ into eleet. There ere a. number of other 1 buyers here, and they on in no better posi- \tion than I em to do business this tell. When the combined efleot of the stoppage of the trade we have all been doing is calculated it will be seen that the result must be serious to the fumem” Whom-volu- o! hou- Ilu new day We: § big diluent. I luv. a order for The-e unputinn lawman. while di- rectly referring to 'the western counties of the Province, ire epplicsble with equal fore. m 811' M of Onmio and the hom- ruining column of Quebec. And tho dimensions to which tho hone trudehu greet. inlportence to the whole Dominion. Since confederation there have been ex- port/ed. from Conch 330,000 horses, of Which 520,000 were sent to the United State. To enmi- the United States market. the enormous sum of 86,500,000 he: been paid inflation. Had there been unrestrict- alum inn-ken The hefeudore of restriction my to make ‘ the p.921. of Cm Scum tint'bhe mas ‘ wellflbi fiBieh the Cnnadien market. in i landfills”: to combine: doa- not. result in" rig-w: ‘Iiooopolmg‘ fleecing the consumer. rEme‘u mhorteetimony of a couple of wit.- euee withregu-d to the bolt combine end 'i'u' cox-him: prices. flon of the amount of tho protoc- fiofi Bolt: can be bought in Detroit, for apex-cent. lea than from the Candi-n -. mblne, and only that the duty on the hawk; Bqlfi' :- no large we would get. all ed reciprocity tint. amount would lave ndded had! no the receipt: of the fax-mere. Reciprocity and a. Reform Govern- ment will give to the farmers $30 I. head and more for their horses. W indict, any-l: â€"- ‘_‘ We an fetch light bolt! from Detroit. ué‘psyflnduty,bnb tho tariff is no 3:- mad Mitknockl out. my “tempt to bring ihhuvy bola. The duty 1: l cent. ad 3,th a pound on bolts less than fi-inch in Mutual-(130 per cunt. 3d vuL . on bolts Inge? than 1-inch in dismoter it u on centn ,ponnd- Ind 25 per cent. The slimy on' tha'lu‘er sizes mount; to 50 per How Paces m Kgpt Up In no our oilr npfily there; we could do it. “d pay dmotlt35 per can't. duty.” Mr. Williun Risdon, proprietor‘of the Eric Ir'on' Works, St. Thom“, my: :â€"- “ We buy all our belts in Clevelend and eav'e money by it. The duty is ebont 50 per cent., and we pey it and get in the Cleveland bolts below the Cnsdien price. The etherdny n Cenedien agent celled et my 050° @ dell me holte, end to test prieee I ge’ve hirn en oul'er. I found it we: cheeper to go to Clevelnnd. Beeldee being cheaper the Cleveland bolts are better. As my fore- ‘mytxtto the agent. ‘Yon an eater thenute on the Clevelend bolt: with your end it taken e couple of monkey- Wrenchee to put on the Cenedien nuts.’ The cost of that trinl order to the Cenedien home was 20 per cent. above what I had been paying in Cleveland with e. duty of one cent 0» pound on certain eizee nnd 33 per cent. ed ve1., or ebent 50 per cent. edded. This wide difetence in in bolte. There is not so much' in nuts , the combine in more pliable with nute, yet the Cenedinn mufectnrer he to pey high for balk.” u-uuâ€" -__ , and Ompotolntho Unmet! States. Themtrictionisu try to scare the elec- tor! of Candi Manchu!» openthe mt wkou of the United Sums by gloomy 'piétum” of the wreck tint will come upon the mafiotnring industries of 1 M ll Wmcpolypdvilega of the‘ Nitionul Policy Nwiehdnwn. The ma- 1 hctmrl Wu- lnn no such wide» W Mr: Avery considerable number‘ of tinnitmdibmt line: of mud beta}. ab ul'oppaiu View, deny um. Mae-um W6- tug: 501‘. fihmmwapcin‘ agglom- ”0'0le taboo-3hr hath. Win-avian;â€" “Mnnufihghmm hm‘m"" g...,."...‘ a; 4... m heli- m BOLT . COMBINE. - iv._. -- - :fiihmmmd tad-chm“. mmutooooonu per bushel. E m proportion. If wo . w m.“ 3“.” ,,_A__u.l..Li..A “.3th w. 27,: 1891. with it of 3:33.}; 5.: M vii! Mfli bébdubcuon from 40 to . w W cont. W0 pty duty on our hon. odd ooh. 1». mt newnw. .5an to": 815. ton wepquslalu u 48, thqdntyr w. molt 1.000 was of pig in a ,0"- oothst “(lat-young:- m “mg 3499“}. In I. met “N“; of the Uniud Sma' mu mmw‘l with the Cmad'uns, ft. an Sim/13% the American as much bower 68.“ ' N“; only do they nuke their wove- named 07“ mmmm bu; mil-mm is in .inflnhely' better mp. 1th., get good' pricey 99d 11qu u what. we! "I“ tw'oln than I! gun u can Thoy in" ‘ Merino which I ghould like me obtain ain‘t-ace ind uh my chances with that. Right. mm: the river in the Sum 0‘ Michign, with more people in it thus the” m in Ontario, poopu who‘ hm' hm“! 3nd I am oomtultly muting pebple I knp' ad the miners and lmbermon my nan-Q! Canadian or the «lo-conduit: of will“ States from Cumin. There in I. an over then of 2,000,000 of people in u 1 tally much less in extent than Ontario. stud of going to Manitoba. and the N 905. has? 3653.. 9:. 1.1.2. “hon , .................... floa‘, 8 8 3 oooooooooooooooooooo 35m , 3 3 on ....... 333.. 9.92.6 B . ........... 3.80 530 :0 29. 3233»? on 3 3 .9386 22.5. a loan pox woman. mad mm 130-4 _to 70°: Blanketsâ€":10 cents 1301' lb. and 20 per, cent. .or 60 to 80 per cont. Wall Paperâ€"100 ; to 160 per cent. ‘ These an a few 6f the reason- why times ape dull. and the 80" tual necessifids of life 0031: twice: their value. ': mgrâ€"Paco of vfite naggi- “W poo ,Ifiiép‘a lb. Duty 1§c per Hi.- uni 35percenz. bud 7; par dent... in 31- 995 par cent. 81 wortho' sugar wul cost I. e work- mgmm $1 99; In ‘Juno, 18W. 5 bag: yellow sugor, coming 10: 6d per 112 lbs. in Englond, mounting to £91 3- 9d, or ................ S 443 .75“ Duty 0:; someâ€"19,254 lbs. n “ Workingmen should note the dutiee they ere forced to pey on everything they wee: for the benefit. of the combine: :â€" Workinzmen's Astra.- chan and Plush Caps Linen Collars .......... Cotton Shirts ......... ‘ ._. who” sum-.- ........ ,. mam, m in an. Unwed Sum . market in which they could do business." Riceâ€"75 per cent. Molasses and Syrupâ€"1c pr 1b “1130 per cent. Mull duty, 75 to 100 vo-tos nleéh men-bread and butter. manna,“ tho ClevdndSood unwritten mmumwnr GEWiddifidddm. 'â€" 0” or. an amp Sm Conn“. -< Picbon, Ont... 3.39: Fob, 1391. C. H. Widdifieuhqq 5cm: Dashâ€"In r911“ mi inquiry :- wwdoadthompCOIp-on ha, Infld-ywwa-m «I d WRIHWENV h u ““01”.”de Ala-pp»- £99th "In Yuck Kant. for ma‘mmfié‘Ma r-lgc-perlb......; ......... 3 23896 ~35porcentoucoat" “($443 75) 15540 7; par cont. onducy” "(8443 75) 33 32 tram dgty .................. 3 mos Over 105 par cant. This kind 0! autu- in used by work mnensnd brunet-quad is what up ooxnnms V. mrmonorm 1.:- mo. Couldno wands:- of people incroauo tho 00“ d Cal-OI.... who moved in“ the Thor. is I- whet to! people inttfl'fi' at than Ontariu 11" sob. and the North- .0 .m. In' mom I Per Cent. 75t080 65 my 81 10 tor-crowing tho .‘ out variation. "Thee-win“ duo mu. m o! , Wuhan-to limit thanpplyo! may Mue. of pen um. luv. Wanton boon i ENGLISH _ornuo N. Pm. Bentham: thâ€"at Sham. plu- SDI-rt Commercisl unioa mean free trade he “can Ammwd thnDominiouud 5 pro L90mm nrifl' Igsiut. thc- mother country. If Can 1da desired that. Canada m have it.--Rt.. Hon. J eleph Chunk I must. distinctly eflrm the rich; 0f the Canadian Legislature to “Just the taxation of the peoph in the way theydeei'n best. on. i . it. should unfortunstely heppen to meet the dillpprovdiof the Impetiel Minutry He! Kajesty cannot be advised fl disallow such cote unless 501' “MI” in prepered to assume the “mini-usual ofthe 551i“ of the colony irrespective d the View: of the inhshiuntmâ€"Sir Alex-- det Celt, formerly cumin High Comlfli' eioner, end et one time Finenee Minis“ under Sir John Msodonnld. her rolling mills The duty on pig iron 1 hss given birth to sn industry in Quebec, is“ some pig is being nude in Novs Soot“, but the greet iron mom-e8 of this country lie idle. And thooe are the results of tsxel thst hsndiosp every iron msnufscturer snd incrosu the cost of tbst which he nukes. the oost 0‘ iron eaten into nosrly every. thingthstris‘mlanhcturod. And not by the snout only of the duty that each mufscturer has to pay for his mw nsterisls is the price st vhich he cells 'his goods incrossed. Hessks sproflt on his whole outlsy on his goods, sud the pad-by to whom he sells must not only pay the amount of the duty which the msnufacturer has paid on hi. :sw msterisla. but 3 mm; on that dutyaswoll. Q shot-1th. noun. sdlstotheeouuiuer, in mt?“ mug p, “the: profit 0! “to duty and profi. 2;?!de P“ 9! Magnesium“; fill this synt- of flulfiphostion is the w"‘°fi' 0'! M asterisk imposed .tho huefitofois'mvho as“ “wwwsmpmm at; It is at this very moment a matter of GI. cuuion in tinned: whether a. treety of reci- procity should not be concluded with tho United States, and the result of the delib- eration my very possibly be on admis- sion of the manufgcturos of New England into the Dominion undo: lighter duties than the manufao tures of Great Britain. If the Canadian Ministry come to the conclusion that such an unngemcnt in for the benefit of that country will the Coloniol Ofice ulvue the Crown to disallow the negotiations! A8- Suredly notâ€"London Times. Heavy Duties Mr. David Coven is the head of the Lon- don Foundry Company. - He was a protec- tionist when the National Policy was intro- duced, but now he favors unrestricted reci- procity. He show: how the duty on iron and goal is a tax on every article into the manufacture of em thee article: go. - “We want the reeonrcea of thin country developed,” Mr. Com said, “ and we cannot have them' developed until there in a market to which to take them. The people of Canada have been paying high dutiesoniron. coal and other things for twelve year: that their mines might be developed. They have been paying for a development and it has not taken place. We have been paying our money and have not ijeeeieed the return .we were promieed. \Vhy have we not? Because there are 110‘ people enough here to require it. and our products under the pment relations of thie country with the United Statea are ahut oatof the market over there. We have been paying 8 48 a we on pig iron and SL3a tonpn hat iron, and where has an, advantage arieen 2 Are we any further ad- vanced thanwe were twelve years ago in iron mining? Very little. The duty on til-Monty benefits one firm in 0mm; viz, the ownere ef the Hamilton and Hum. How Development is Bearded by $11. file‘s. 3m out. canto! in... imp-how» fuflfishw hum“ Sufi-“ammuni- N. ”Th. (11in 65 cub-hand”. an manta-mama. i. M H.481». inc-d, mppliodby a... ‘H‘Mbi-pomdbymm m-awgn.m Anduin. 51.4. .. H (Minn Maxim cheat-rm (Signal) 0. L. DAILY. IRON AND COAL. Your-I truly, ho nofiulyhu Mil he“

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